7 Questions to Ask Before You Advertise
by Michele Pariza Wacek
Published on this site: April 15th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month...

Most business owners and managers keep a fairly close eye on their
marketing budgets.
And nothing throws a budget out of whack faster than advertising.
Advertising, or paying good money to get your message in
front of your target market, still has a place in your marketing
mix, although it's not quite as effective as it once was.
If you're going to advertise, you need to be smart about it --
or you can quickly find yourself with a blown budget and not much
to show for it. Below are seven questions to ask yourself before
writing out that check.
- Do you need to generate customers/traffic/leads/etc.
right away? If so, then you better pull out your wallet.
Advertising is hands down the fastest way to get your message
in front of your target market. (You're paying for placement
after all.)
- Do you have another way to get the word out about your
business? For instance, do you have a customer database
or an e-zine list? If so, then you might be better off sending
an e-mail (assuming you have customers' e-mails). Although
technically e-mail announcements fall under advertising,
I'm not counting it in this particular case because it's
more or less free (or very low cost).
Perhaps you have a good news angle and a good relationship
with
a reporter. Or you have a high-traffic Web site and/or blog.
Or maybe you're an active volunteer with a large organization
and can use networking to get the message out.
But if none of those really apply, then you'd better take
a closer look at advertising.
- Do you need to augment your other marketing efforts?
Maybe you have articles featured on a Web site targeted
to your customer base. Great when your article is front
and center and not-so-great when your article is buried
in archives. A little advertising on that site can keep
you in your target market's sight all the time. Or maybe
you struck gold and got a big article written about your
company in the perfect trade publication. Fantastic for
that month and not-so-fantastic for the other 11 months
of the year. Or maybe it's taking you longer than you'd
like to drive traffic to your Web site. Advertising is good
for speeding things along.
Frequency is king when it comes to marketing -- if you're
out of your customers' sight, you're probably out of their
mind when it comes to buying time. Advertising is a good
way to beef up or speed up what you're already doing.
- Are other marketing methods not appropriate in this situation?Let's
say you want to have a sale. But your customer database
is small (or nonexistent). Your Web site has minimal traffic.
And you aren't going to get any bites from the media since
having a sale isn't news. What do you do? Run some ads.
- Would you rather save time than money? Let's face it.
Running an ad is easy. Other marketing methods are more
time-consuming. If you want your marketing to be easy, then
advertising is about as easy as it's going to get. (Now
there is a caveat to this one, because you can hire people
to do some of those marketing asks, such as updating Web
sites, running PR campaigns, etc. However, not everything
can be hired out so you still might be stuck spending time
you don't have.)
- Are you planning to test a new campaign or a new product/target
market? Running small, inexpensive ads can be a good way
to test certain marketing aspects before launching big,
expensive, time-consuming campaigns. If you want to penetrate
a new market or if you have a new product to launch or a
new marketing message to try, buy some ads and see what
the response rate is. Another strength of advertising is
control -- you have total control over your test.
- Do other marketing approaches never quite measure up?
It happens. Advertising in one or two specific media outlets
seem to generate more sales and more leads then anything
else you've tried. If that's the case, then don't mess with
it. As the old saying goes, if it ain't broke, don't fix
it.
Creativity Exercise -- Advertising and your business
Is advertising right for your business? Try this exercise and see.
- What's your biggest marketing challenge right now? Write
it down.
- Go through the above list of questions and ask yourself
each one. Does it apply to your situation? If it does, write
that down too.
- Do some brainstorming. In what ways can you use advertising
to solve your marketing challenges? What media would work
best? Online? Print? Radio? Television? Direct mail? Something
else? Make up an ad for a variety of media.
Now do the exact opposite. Think of ways advertising WON'T
work for your business. Brainstorm at least 25 reasons why
advertising won't work for your specific situation. Be silly.
It's a good way to loosen you up.
- Go back and reread both your pro and con lists. Now read
your ads. Do you like what you came up with? Do any of them
resonate with you, even now after coming up with your list
of objections?
You may have just come up with your next advertising campaign.

Michele Pariza Wacek is the author of "Got
Ideas? Unleash Your Creativity and Make More Money." She offers
two free e-zines that help subscribers combine their creativity
with hard-hitting marketing and copywriting principles to become
more successful at attracting new clients, selling products and
services and boosting business. She can be reached at: http://www.TheArtistSoul.com

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